> Hi all,
>
> first of all, sorry for cross-posting, I guess some of you will get
> this message two or three times.
>
> Short introduction of myself, my name is Axel Hecht, and I'm
> coordinating the localizations for Firefox and Thunderbird.
>
> While looking at our status quo at Mozilla, and looking at other
> attempts, I'm seeing limitations in both what we can do and what
> others can do, and came up with an alternative proposal which I'm now
> opening up for a broader community feedback.
>
> I am proposing a solution for plain strings of course, but plurals and
> declensions, too. Declensions are new, and, sadly, not backwards
> compatible in any way. I also made a move on parameter substitution in
> localized strings.
>
> All of this is new enough to take Localization from version 1.0 to 2.0
> (yeah, I'm all web 2.0), so I took the freedom to codename this l20n.
> Pronounced l-twenty, I drop the 'n'.
>
> This proposal is done with Mozilla on my mind, but it is in no way
> limited to Mozilla, thus I'm seeking wider feedback and cooperation on
> this.
>
> There are some documents on l20n on the mozilla wiki, if you're
> interested, please check out http://wiki.mozilla.org/L20n, I have a
> proof-of-concept implementation with some basic examples implemented
> in ajax (you'll see I'm no web designer) on
> http://people.mozilla.com/~axel/l20n/js-l20n/.
>
> I will give a presentation at FOSDEM this weekend, too,
> http://fosdem.org/2007/schedule/events/mozilla_l20n, that's Sunday at
> 2pm. I'll give some introduction on where l20n is supposed to go, and
> I do hope to have a good deal of discussion there. Feel free to grab
> me anywhere close to the Mozilla developers room, if you wish.
>
> Online feedback is of course welcome, either to me, or put challenges
> up on the wiki (add your pages to the L20n category, please).
> Discussion threads are likely best suited for the mozilla.dev.i18n
> newsgroup, which you can find on google groups, too, in addition to
> news.mozilla.org. That's close topic-wise and really low bandwidth, so
> your signal-to-noise ratio should be fine.
>
> There are very few things set in stone, so I'll be happy to see a
> wider community participate.
>
> Thanks and sorry for the wide-spread noise, I'll only do that once.
10 is not a version number. Please remember what 'l10n' means and imagine
how unabbreviated version of 'l20n' will look like.
--
Tomas